Sanatçının Albümleri
Elementi
2001 · albüm
Felona E Sorona
1973 · albüm
Felona E Sorona (50th Anniversary / Remastered)
1973 · albüm
Il Fiume
1996 · albüm
Le Orme: Antologia 1970 - 1980
1993 · albüm
Le Orme - Grandi Incontri
1990 · albüm
Orme
1990 · albüm
Piccola Rapsodia Dell'Ape
1980 · albüm
Florian
1979 · albüm
Storia O Leggenda
1977 · albüm
Verita' Nascoste
1976 · albüm
Smogmagica
1975 · albüm
Il meglio di: Le Orme
2019 · albüm
Sulle ali di un sogno
2019 · albüm
ClassicOrme
2017 · albüm
Felona E/And Sorona 2016
2016 · albüm
I nostri successi (I nostri successi)
2015 · albüm
Compilation
2013 · albüm
I miei sogni
2013 · albüm
Dovunque andrai
2011 · albüm
Contrappunti (Remastered 2023)
1974 · albüm
Contrappunti
1974 · albüm
Orme In Concerto
1974 · albüm
1967-1969 Le Origini
2005 · albüm
L' Infinito
2004 · albüm
Benzer Sanatçılar
Metamorfosi
Sanatçı
Il Balletto di Bronzo
Sanatçı
Semiramis
Sanatçı
Osanna
Sanatçı
Locanda delle fate
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The Trip
Sanatçı
Latte E Miele
Sanatçı
Arti & Mestieri
Sanatçı
Banco Del Mutuo Soccorso
Sanatçı
Museo Rosenbach
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New Trolls
Sanatçı
Alphataurus
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Formula 3
Sanatçı
Biyografi
It's easy to forget that America and England didn't exist in a vacuum in the 1960s, and that rock's influence was felt far beyond the English-speaking world. France, Italy, Germany, and much of the rest of Europe spawned their own groups emulating the sounds of psychedelia and other cultural exports from the U.S.A. and the U.K. Le Orme were part of this phenomenon, a quintet formed in Italy in the late '60s that cut two albums of psychedelic rock for the Lord label in Milan. Aldo Tagliapietra (vocals, acoustic guitar, flute, celesta), Nino Smeraldi (electric guitar, vocals), Claudio Galieti (bass, cello, vocals), Toni Pagliuca (keyboards), and Michi Dei Rossi (drums, percussion) started out sounding something like the Beatles circa the Magical Mystery Tour and Yellow Submarine albums, complete with distorted lead guitar solos and songs intended to evoke the variant states of mind associated with certain recreational drug use. Smeraldi, who co-wrote (with Tagliapietra) all of the songs on their first album, also arranged all of their material. Le Orme stayed together during the 1970s, by which time they'd evolved into an Emerson, Lake & Palmer-type progressive rock band, cutting four albums in that vein and then disbanding in 1982. In 1986 the band re-formed -- including Tagliapietra, Pagliuca, and Dei Rossi in the lineup -- with the intention of touring but then released the Orme album in 1990, heralding a return to recording as well as performing on a semi-regular basis. Pagliuca left the group in 1992, replaced by keyboardist Michele Bon, but during the '90s and 2000s the group persevered, issuing such albums as Il Fiume (1995), Elementi (2001), and L'Infinito (2004), and also making concert and festival appearances in Europe as well as North America. However, Tagliapietra departed the group in 2009, leaving Le Orme in a trio formation with only Dei Rossi remaining from the band's '60s and '70s heydays. ~ Bruce Eder, Rovi